carboxylderivatives
Carboxylderivatives are compounds derived from carboxylic acids by replacing the hydroxyl group of the carboxyl moiety (-COOH) with various leaving groups, forming reactive acyl derivatives. The common feature is the acyl (R-CO-) group, which enables nucleophilic acyl substitution: a nucleophile attacks the carbonyl carbon and the leaving group departs. The reactivity of these derivatives toward nucleophiles and hydrolysis is largely governed by the identity of the leaving group.
Common examples include acyl chlorides (RCOCl), acid anhydrides (RCO-O-COR'), esters (RCOOR'), and amides (RCONR'R''), as well
Applications and significance: Carboxylderivatives are central to organic synthesis and materials science. They serve as intermediates